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请认真阅读下列各小题,并根据上下文语境和所给首字母或中文的提示,写出下列各句空格...

请认真阅读下列各小题,并根据上下文语境和所给首字母或中文的提示,写出下列各句空格 中的单词,注意保持语义和形式的一致。请将答案的完整形式写在答题卡上相应题号的横线上。

1.It's no use reasoning with him now because he is as s ______ as a mule.

2.Trump is an______(了不起的)father who impressed on his children the importance of independence and hard work when they were young.

3.As you go further south, you will notice a g ______ change of climate, warmer and warmer.

4.Maybe we should r ______ ourselves of modem technology and return to simpler times.

5.Film fans usually consume much popcorn, especially when watching a ______(令人紧张的)thriller.

6.The government made a statement ______(谴责)the bombing which killed hundreds of innocent citizens.

7.There are stories about his g ______ and the massive amounts of money he gave to charities.

8.The former Secretary-General of the United Nations is ______(热爱)by people all over the world for his noble character.

9.Living in ______(极度)poverty, children in this area don't have a chance to get educated, which in turn, worsens the situation.

10.The new Employment Promotion Law, coming into effect in early 2008, will introduce new measures to root out d ______ against women in employment.

 

1.stubborn 2.awesome 3.gradual 4.rid 5.tense 6.condemning 7.generosity 8.adored 9.desperate 10.discrimination 【解析】 并根据上下文语境和所给首字母或中文的提示,写出下列各句空格中的单词。 1. 考查形容词。句意:现在跟他讲道理是没有用的,因为他像骡子一样固执。“as+形容词或副词原级+as”结构用于表示不同人或物同一性质的比较,意为“和……一样”,是同级的比较,故此处应填形容词,且通过句意可知,此处应为“固执的”。故填stubborn。 2. 考查形容词。句意:特朗普是一位了不起的父亲,在孩子们还小的时候就给他们灌输了独立和努力工作的重要性。father为名词,应由形容词来修饰。故填awesome。 3. 考查形容词。句意:再往南走,你会注意到气候的逐渐变化,越来越暖和。change为名词,应由形容词来修饰,根据“warmer and warmer”越来越暖和,可知,温度是逐渐变化的。故填gradual。 4. 考查动词。句意:也许我们应该摆脱现代技术,回到简单的时代。should为情态动词,后接动词原形。根据句意可以推测,要回到简单的时代,需要摆脱现代技术。故填rid。 5. 考查形容词。句意:影迷们通常会吃很多爆米花,尤其是在看紧张令人紧张的惊悚片的时候。thriller为名词,应由形容词来修饰。故填tense。 6. 考查非谓语动词。句意:政府发表声明,谴责造成数百名无辜公民死亡的爆炸事件。分析句子结构可知,此处非谓语动词“condemn”作statement的定语,是主动关系。故填condemning。 7. 考查名词复数。句意:这里有关于他的慷慨和他给慈善机构大量金钱的故事。分析句子结构可知,此空位于介词后面,且有形容词性物主代词his修饰,故此处应填名词。根据句中给慈善机构捐款,可以推断此处应为“慷慨”。故填generosity。 8. 考查语态。句意:这位前联合国秘书长因其高尚的品格而受到全世界人民的爱戴。分析句子结构可知,主语“The former Secretary-General of the United Nations”与“adore”是被动关系,表示“被爱戴”。故填adored。 9. 考查形容词。句意:这个地区的孩子生活在极度贫困中,没有机会接受教育,这反过来又使情况恶化。分析句子结构可知,此处用来修饰名词“poverty”,应用从形容词。故填desperate。 10. 考查名词。句意:将于2008年初生效的新《就业促进法》将采取新措施,消除就业中对妇女的歧视。此处作“root out”的宾语,应用名词;且根据句意可以推断,此处应为消除对妇女的歧视。故填discrimination。
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阅读下面短文,在空白处填入1个适当的单词或括号内单词的正确形式。

“Climate emergency” was picked by Oxford Dictionaries as the word of the year for 2019 after 1. (use) on average 100 times more than in 2018.

Defined as “a situation 2. urgent action is required to reduce or stop climate change and avoid environmental damage resulting from it ”, the word became one of the most important 3. (term) of 2019. “Climate” did not have a place in the top words 4.(typical) used to modify (修饰) “emergency” in 2018. Instead, the top types of emergencies that people wrote about 5. (be) health, hospital and family emergencies. But with climate emergency, people saw something new, 6. extension of emergency to the global level. The choice was reflective, not just of the rise in climate awareness, but the focus specifically 7. the language used to discuss it. Oxford said the rise of “climate emergency” 8.  (show) an intentional push towards language of urgency.

The dictionary’s word of the year is chosen 9. (reflect) attention of the passing year and should have lasting potential as a term of 10. (culture) significance. Previous winners of word of the year include “toxic” in 2018 and “youthquake” in 2017.

 

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Face shape lets Al spot rare disorders

People with genetic syndromes (综合征)sometimes have revealing facial features, but using them to make a quick and cheap diagnosis can be _______given there are hundreds of possible conditions they may have. A new neural (神经系统)network that analyses photographs of faces can help doctors _______ the possibilities.

Yaron Gurovich at biotechnology firm FDNA in Boston and his team built a neural network to look at the overall impression of faces and _______ a list of the 10 genetic syndromes a person is most likely to have.

They _______ the neural network, called Deep Gestalt, on 17,000 images correctly labeled to match more than 200 genetic syndromes. The team then asked Al to _______potential genetic disorders from a further 502 photos of people with such conditions. It included the correct answer among its list of 10 responses 91 per cent of the time.

Gurovich and his team also _______ the neural network's ability to distinguish between the different genetic mutations (父异)that can lead to the same syndrome. They used photographs of people with Noonan syndrome, which can result from mutations in any one of five genes. Deep Gestalt correctly identified the genetic source of the physical appearance 64 per cent of the time. It's clearly not _______, but it's still much better than humans are at trying to do this.

As the system makes its assessments, the facial regions that are most helpful in the determination are _______ and made available for doctors to view. This helps them to understand the relationships between genetic make-up and physical appearance.

The fact that the diagnosis is based on a simple photograph raises questions about_______ . If faces can reveal details about genetics, then employers and insurance providers could, in principle, ________ use such techniques to have a ________ against people who have a high probability of having certain disorders. ________ , Gurovich says the tool will only be ________ for use by clinicians.

This technique could bring significant________ for those who have genetic syndromes. The real value here is that for some of these ultra-rare diseases, the process of diagnosis can be many, many years. This kind of technology can help narrow down the search space and then be confirmed through checking genetic markers. For some diseases, it will cut down the time to diagnosis dramatically. For others, it could perhaps add means of finding other people with the disease and, ________ , help find new treatments or cures.

1.A.convincing B.practical C.reliable D.tough

2.A.narrow down B.result in C.bring about D.arise from

3.A.wait B.present C.mail D.feed

4.A.focused B.touched C.based D.trained

5.A.adjust B.identify C.change D.cure

6.A.recognized B.showed C.tested D.acquired

7.A.perfect B.acceptable C.specific D.workable

8.A.covered B.highlighted C.excluded D.monitored

9.A.privacy B.accuracy C.reality D.objectivity

10.A.legally B.regularly C.secretly D.efficiently

11.A.vote B.fight C.argument D.prejudice

12.A.Furthermore B.Similarly C.Otherwise D.However

13.A.available B.impossible C.ready D.rare

14.A.challenges B.damages C.benefits D.concerns

15.A.by contrast B.on the contrary C.in addition D.in turn

 

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Without Her Name

It is a truth universally acknowledged that Pride and Prejudice by English novelist Jane Austen is one of the most popular tales ever written. But behind the global admiration she enjoys today lies a sad fact.1.

In Pride and Prejudice, she was simply the author of Sense and Sensibility, which had carried the title “By a Lady.” The anonymity(匿名) worked so well that even friends of the Austen family had no idea that dear, sweet Jane was a novelist. A friend of Jane' s brother Henry actually told him that Pride and Prejudice was “much too clever to be the work of a woman.”

2.Tom Paine, a Founding Father of the United States, kept his identity hidden for a short time after the publication of his famous Common Sense.

For a woman, however, there was the added burden of societal expectations. Any sort of publishing or public display of talent was considered improper behavior for a woman.

It wasn't only fear about “bad manners” that discouraged women from writing under their own names.3. Charlotte Bronte, author of Jane Eyre, once sent her poetry to Robert Southey, a famous poet. Southey simply responded: “Literature cannot be the business of a woman's life.” Bronte used her pen name, Currer Bell, to publish Jane Eyre in 1847.Her sister Emily published Wuthering

Heights as Ellies Bell in the same year.

4.Mary Shelley' s Frankenstein(《科学人》) had come out without her name in 1818.Mary Anne Evans wrote Middlemarch and her other novels under the pen name George Eliot.

The 20th century saw great progress towards gender equality. In theory, it should be unnecessary for women writers to follow Austen' s path any longer, unless driven by personal reasons.5. Joanne Rowling, author of the Harry Potter novels, was advised to become J. K. Rowling. That's because boys might dislike the feeling of picking up a book by a woman. Connie Ann Kirk explained in her biography of Rowling.

A.Jane Austen has attracted a great deal of critical attention in recent years.

B.Women 's writing was seldom taken seriously.

C.Politicians, for reasons of safety, also frequently chose to be invisible.

D.In practice, however, certain prejudices just won't go away.

E.in a 2016 interview, Italian novelist Elena Ferrante claimed her use of a pen name let her concentrate on writing.

F.in her own time, Austen 's name never appeared on her books.

G.They joined a long list of women authors who felt they had to hide.

 

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    I’m Dina Asher-Smith. Growing in Orpington, southeast London, I love being the hunter. The one in pursuit. In training, I’ll latch on to the boys and chase them down. Even when I was younger, I tended to race girls who were older than me — at 17 I was racing 30-year-olds. It’s where I’m comfortable. But the hunter can go on to become the hunted. And this year at the World Athletics Championships in Doha, Qatar, I won gold in the 200m. At 23, I became the first British woman to win a world championship sprinting (短跑) title. The morning after the race, I was in the media tent and was told that I’d been mentioned in the Parliament.

Track and field is a mental game. You’re in your own little world, competing to be the person who can run the fastest in a straight line. My job is to take my body to a place where I think it can’t do any more and then keep going. To do that, I need to know my strengths and weaknesses. People get caught up in embarrassment or shame when they’re not good at something, but I just don’t have that in me. I do have a voice in my head that tells me if I’m not good at things, but it doesn’t make me feel negative about myself I use it to identify where I can improve and then I just keep going to training every day.

I’ve inherited personality traits from my parents that help me in my career. My mum is excitable and when I’m on the track, I have her fire-wanting to go for everything. I always know when I finish a race that I can turn around and find her in the front row, jumping up and down. My dad is more reserved. He has a cool exterior and that’s useful for me when I need calmness. I know to look for him a few rows behind my mum. They gave me opportunities to try whatever I was interested in. When I wanted to try golf my dad bought me cut-down clubs and had me attempting to putt balls (推球入洞) in the back garden. My mum used to play hockey with me outside the house. They took me to so many clubs and classes.

I started training with my coach, John Blackie, in my mid-teens. We met when I was eight as he ran the kids academy at my running club. Along with my parents, the three of them always emphasized that they just wanted me to be happy. They never pushed me too early. And, as I’ve got older, I’ve realized that’s unique. When running became serious, I knew that if it all stopped being fun for me, I could stop doing it. They put Dina the person before Dina the runner. Yes, the public might be disappointed and the newspapers might have a pop (抨击), but my parents and friends are still going to love me, and my coach is still going to be there. That knowledge allows me to stay relaxed under pressure.

Being as prepared as I can be is crucial as it keeps me calm and able to deliver in the moment. When I was studying history at university, I’d choose exams over coursework because I knew I could put the work in and perform under pressure. I was studying heavy things every day, like people facing prejudice because of their skin, or women sacrificing their lives for others to have the right to vote. It made me realize how lucky I am that the thing that gets me most frustrated is somebody beating me on the track. While, yes, I make sacrifices-some easy, such as not drinking and going out, and some harder, like restricting the food that I eat — ultimately, what I do is entertainment.

Everyone’s asking me about Tokyo Olympics, but I’m more focused on today. It’s important for me to keep my hopes and dreams separate from other people’s. I’m grateful everybody wants me to do well, but my next step has to be for me, not anyone else.

1.What does the underlined sentence in Paragraph 1 probably mean?

A.Asher-Smith is the victim of the sprinting world.

B.Asher-Smith becomes the focus of media coverage.

C.Asher-Smith now runs faster than those she chased.

D.Asher-Smith is no match for older racers in competitions.

2.Paragraph 4 indicates that Asher-Smith’s parents and coach                .

A.prioritize her personal well-being

B.justify her failure to continue running

C.put her interests above the other runners

D.shelter her from the criticism of the media

3.What impact does her university life have on her?

A.It makes her lead a cosy life today.

B.It allows her to face prejudice bravely

C.It enables her to be better prepared as an athlete.

D.It inspires her to fight for women’s human rights.

4.What does the passage mainly talk about?

A.What it takes to be a gold medal sprinter.

B.Why it is hard to rise to fame in sprinting.

C.Who one can turn to in pursuit of the dream.

D.How parents discipline a sprinting champion.

 

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Bill Gates on how to fight future pandemics

WHEN HISTORIANS write the book on the covid-19 pandemic, what we've lived through so far will probably take up only the first third or so.The bulk of the story will be what happens next.

I believe that humanity will beat this pandemic, but only when most of the population is vaccinated(接种疫苗).Until then, life will not return to normal.

As the pandemic slows in developed nations,it will accelerate in developing ones.Their experience,however,will be worse.In poorer countries,where fewer jobs can be done remotely,distancing measures won't work as well.The virus will spread quickly,and health systems won't be able to care for the infected.

Wealthy nations can help.But people in rich and poor places alike will be safe only once we have an effective medical solution for this virus,which means a vaccine.

My hope is that,by the second half of 2021,facilities around the world will be manufacturing a vaccine.If that's the case,it will be a history-making achievement: the fastest humankind has ever gone from recognizing a new disease to immunizing (免疫)against it.

Apart from this progress in vaccines,two other big medical breakthroughs will emerge from the pandemic.One will be in the field of diagnostics.The next time a novel virus crops up,people will probably be able to test for it at home.Researchers could have such a test ready within a few months of identifying a new disease.

The third breakthrough will be in antiviral drugs.We haven't been as effective at developing drugs to fight viruses as we have those to fight bacteria.But that will Researchers will develop large diverse libraries of antivirals,which they'll be able to scan trough and quickly find effective treatments for novel viruses.

All three technologies will prepare us for the next pandemic by allowing us to intervene(干预)early when the number of cases is still very low.

Our progress won't be in science alone.It will also be in our ability to make sure everyone benefits from that science.In the years after 2021,I think we'll learn from the years after 1945. With the end of the Second World War, leaders built international institutions like the UN to prevent more conflicts.After covid-19, leaders will prepare institutions to prevent the next pandemic.

These will be a mix of national,regional and global organizations.I expect they will participate in regular"germ games”in the same way as armed forces take part in War games.These will keep us ready for the next time a novel virus jumps from bats or birds to humans.

I hope wealthy nations include poorer ones in these preparations,especially by devoting more foreign aid to building up their primary health-care systems.This pandemic has shown us that viruses don't obey border laws and that we are all connected biologically by a network of microscopic germs,whether we like it or not.

The best analogy(类比)for today might be November 10th 1942.Britain had just won its first land victory of the war,and Winston Churchill declared in a speech: “This is not the end.It is not even the beginning of the end.But it is,perhaps,the end of the beginning.”

1.What are the three technologies that will prepare us for the next pandemic?

manufacturing a vaccine fast     

diagnosing a virus at home

developing antiviral drugs 

allowing us to intervene early

A.①②③ B.①②④ C.①③④ D.②③④

2.As far as poorer countries are concerned,which of the following is TRUE according to this passage?

A.pandemic disease is more likely to begin in poorer countries

B.Working from home can work well in poorer countries.

C.Health systems are sufficient to care for the infected in poorer countries.

D.Virus will cross borders if poorer countries fail to contain it.

3.Why is the Second World War mentioned in Para.8?

A.The fight against the COVID-19 is similar to the Second World War.

B.People are suffering just as they were in the Second World War.

C.We should cooperate globally just as we did after the Second World War.

D.Countries are fighting each other like in the Second World War.

4.What is the tone of this passage?

A.pessimistic B.optimistic

C.neutral D.indifferent

 

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